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Release Date
October 19, 2007 TEA WITH THE GUERRILLA GIRLS
  Join the Guerrilla Girls—the self-proclaimed "Conscience of the Art World"—for one of their signature illustrated PowerPoint presentations, filled ith "facts, humor and fake fur."
July 10, 2007 MEDIA ADVISORY
NATIONAL MUSEUM OF WOMEN IN THE ARTS 20TH ANNIVERSARY FESTIVAL OF WOMEN’S FILM AND MEDIA ARTS
  NMWA’s 20th anniversary festival of women’s film and media arts will showcase works by emerging and established female artists.
Media Release PDF
June 28, 2007 FRIDA KAHLO: PUBLIC IMAGE, PRIVATE LIFE
A SELECTION OF PHOTOGRAPHS AND LETTERS
at NMWA July 6, 2007–October 14, 2007
  WASHINGTON— Mexican painter Frida Kahlo (1907–1954) has fascinated the public for generations. The National Museum of Women in the Arts presents Frida Kahlo: Public Image, Private Life. A Selection of Photographs and Letters in collaboration with the Smithsonian Latino Center and the Mexican Cultural Institute. The exhibition runs from July 6 through Oct. 14, to coincide with Frida Kahlo’s 100th birthday.
June 14, 2007 SMITH BARNEY IN COLLABORATION WITH THE BUSINESS AND PROFESSIONAL WOMEN’S COUNCIL OF NMWA PRESENTS “THE ART OF COLLECTING ART”
  Smith Barney in collaboration with the Business and Professional Women's Council of the National Museum of Women in the Arts invites you to learn how you can be a successful art collector.
April 17, 2007 ARTISTS’ SKETCHBOOKS AND ILLUSTRATED DIARIES: EXPLORING THE IN/VISIBLE AT NMWA
April 18, 2007–July 15, 2007
  WASHINGTON— The National Museum of Women in the Arts presents the private side of artists’ creative lives in Artists’ Sketchbooks and Illustrated Diaries: Exploring the In/Visible, Apr. 18, 2007 through Jul. 15, 2007. Curated by Krystyna Wasserman, NMWA’s curator of book arts, the exhibition includes 21 works by 14 artists from the United States, France, Spain and Argentina.
April 11, 2007 Katrina: Mississippi Women Remember: Photographs by Melody Golding
  WASHINGTON-On August 29, 2005, a monstrous storm came ashore leaving behind enormous destruction beyond belief. The National Museum of Women in the Arts pays tribute to this tragic event from March 9, 2007 to May 28, 2007, through the photographic exhibit, Katrina: Mississippi Women Remember: Photographs by Melody Golding. The 53 photographs offer personal insights into life on the Mississippi Gulf Coast following Hurricane Katrina.
March 21, 2007 VJ/DJ: After Hours at NMWA, Friday, March 23
  Washington, DC—On Friday, March 23 from 6 to 9 p.m. the National Museum of Women in the Arts’ Great Hall will be transformed into a live cinema for VJ/DJ: After Hours at NMWA. In celebration of Women's History Month, this real-time art event brings together video and audio artists from around the world thanks to a partnership with the Embassy of Spain and the Embassy of Finland.
March 1, 2007 Calling All Women Filmmakers: National Museum of Women in the Arts to Hold First Women's Film and Media Arts Festival September 25–30, 2007
  WASHINGTON—Women filmmakers and media artists will have five days to shine in D.C. when the National Museum of Women in the Arts (NMWA) presents its first-ever women's film and media arts festival. From Sept. 25, 2007 through Sept. 30, 2007 the NMWA 20th Anniversary Festival of Women's Film and Media Arts will highlight the talents of outstanding contemporary women filmmakers who are creating works that are both artistically innovative and socially relevant.
February 20, 2007 National Museum of Women in the Arts Celebrates 20th Anniversary with Groundbreaking Exhibition:
Italian Women Artists from Renaissance to Baroque
March 16, 2007–July 15, 2007
  WASHINGTON—Ask someone to name a painter from the Italian Renaissance or Baroque periods and you will probably hear answers like Leonardo da Vinci, Michelangelo or Caravaggio—all of whom are men.
December 28, 2006 Special Anniversary Double Issue: February 2007
Women in the Arts Magazine
  The National Museum of Women in the Arts is celebrating its 20th Anniversary with a Special Double issue of Women in the Arts magazine, coming in February 2007. This commemorative publication will include archival photos and in-depth articles taking a look back at the beginning of what would become the only museum solely dedicated to celebrating the women artists.

November 16, 2006 Maja Ratkje & POING
Norwegian Artists to Perform at
the National Museum of Women in the Arts
  WASHINGTON—The National Museum of Women in the Arts (NMWA) welcomes two of Norway’s most prominent music talents, Maja Solveig Kjelstrup Ratkje and POING, on Sunday, Dec. 17. The performance from 2 to 4 p.m. is part of the Tenth Anniversary Norwegian Christmas celebration at Union Station.
November 3, 2006 NMWA Receives $1.1 Million Grant from U.S. Department of Education
  WASHINGTON—The National Museum of Women in the Arts (NMWA) has been awarded a $1.1 million grant from the U.S. Department of Education. The four-year grant will fund Teachers Connect: Distance Learning in the Arts; an arts education program that will research the use of distance technologies in professional development programs for teachers.
October 30, 2006 National Museum of Women in the Arts Welcomes New CFO
 

WASHINGTON—The National Museum of Women in the Arts (NMWA) announces Pam Ayres as its Chief Financial Officer. She will play a vital role in the health of the museum, supervising all accounting functions and guiding NMWA’s finances and investments.

October 6, 2006 Washington National Opera and The National Museum of Women in the Arts Celebrate
  Washington National Opera and the National Museum of Women in the Arts will celebrate "The Year of the Woman in Opera" during WNO's 2006-2007 season. The two organizations will offer a series of three events featuring performances, discussions, and lectures by singers, artistic staff, and opera experts.
September 28, 2006 The Book as Art: Twenty Years of Artists' Books From NMWA
  WASHINGTON— Is it a book, is it art, or is it both? From Oct. 27, 2006, to Feb. 4, 2007, The Book as Art: Twenty Years of Artists’ Books from the National Museum of Women in the Arts explores this question and elebrates the sometimes controversial art form that is artists’ books.
September 28, 2006 National Museum of Women in the Arts Presents an Exciting Season of Literary Artists
  WASHINGTON—The National Museum of Women in the Arts (NMWA) celebrates women authors with an extensive calendar of literary artists this fall including poets, novelists, playwrights, memoirists and short story authors. Museum visitors are able to attend lively readings followed by compelling discussions with the authors. Most literary artists will also be available for book signings during the receptions that follow the readings.
September 26, 2006 National Museum of Women in the Arts 2006 Fall Benefit
 

WASHINGTON—The National Museum of Women in the Arts (NMWA) officially kicks off its 20th Anniversary year (1987–2007) with its ninth annual Fall Benefit on Thursday, November 2, 2006, at 6 p.m. Joining benefit-goers will be featured guest, actress and artist Jane Seymour. Ms. Seymour, a passionate painter, who picked up a brush nearly ten years ago, will meet and greet benefit patrons who also will have the opportunity to purchase some of her original watercolors and oil paintings.

July 28, 2006 Beth Weiss, winner of the 2006 Library Fellows Award from the National Museum of Women in the Arts
  WASHINGTON—Beth Weiss, winner of the 2006 Library Fellows Award from the National Museum of Women in the Arts (NMWA), has created a limited-edition artist’s book titled Thoughts on Color, Color of Thoughts. This 20-page book features quotations by artists screen printed on handmade paper from the Philippines. It was designed with the intention of honoring the creative genius behind artists’ work.
July 27, 2006 Bridging Communities: On the Move
  Washington, D.C. – Forty fourth grade students’ individual artists’ books will be on view in the Educational Gallery from June 12 through Nov. 5, in Bridging Communities: On the Move, at the National Museum of Women in the Arts (NMWA). In its eighth year, the Bridging Communities program is a joint venture between two elementary schools and artists and authors. The program introduced the fourth graders to different artists and writers through workshops where new skills were developed.
July 27, 2006 NMWA Receives NEH Challenge Grant To Support Library and Research Center and Humanities Programming
  WASHINGTON—The National Museum of Women in the Arts (NMWA) has been awarded a $635,000 Challenge Grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) to fund a transformative institutional initiative, From Rediscovery to Relevance. In support of this initiative, which places women artists in context through ground-breaking scholarship and new interpretations of art history, the grant will provide an endowment for NMWA’s director of library and research center position, an innovative interpretation and education outreach fund, a distinguished lecture series, and a National Council of Scholars.
June 19, 2006 Dreaming Their Way: Australian Aboriginal Women Painters
  WASHINGTON—Dreaming Their Way: Australian Aboriginal Women Painters is a ground-breaking exhibition of art by 33 indigenous female artists from across the Australian continent. The first-ever of its kind in the U.S., the exhibition presents almost 80 works of art, from intensely colorful canvases to intricate bark paintings, all demonstrating the women’s bold and often experimental representations of their heritage. Works from renowned artists such as Dorothy Napangardi and the late Emily Kame Kngwarreye, as well as emerging painters such as Abie Loy and Regina Wilson will be showcased in this exhibition.
June 16, 2006 Celebrate with us!
  The National Museum of Women in the Arts is celebrating its 20th Anniversary with a Special Double Issue of Women in the Arts magazine, coming in January 2007.
June 13, 2006 Pioneering Lesbian Filmmaker and Actor Guinevere Turner To Attend Screening of Her Latest Short Film
  WASHINGTON—The National Museum of Women in the Arts is proud to host filmmaker and actor Guinevere Turner for the screening of her latest short film Hung at our Pride Screening Sunday, June 18, from 3 to 5 p.m., 1250 New York Ave. NW, Washington D.C.
May 17, 2006 NMWA PRESENTS FOREFRONT: Chakaia Booker
May 26–September 4, 2006
  WASHINGTON—The National Museum of Women in the Arts (NMWA) revives its FOREFRONT series with an exhibition of large-scale works by contemporary sculptor Chakaia Booker (May 26–September 4, 2006). Adopting rubber tires as her primary medium, Booker’s work blends Abstract Expressionist painting with found object assemblage.
March 13, 2006 PIANIST SARA DANESHPOUR IN RECITAL
AT THE NATIONAL MUSEUM OF WOMEN IN THE ARTS
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 22 AT 7:30 P.M.
  "Ecstatic virtuosity...audience shivers in awe."
-Westdeutsche Allgemeine
February 27, 2006 DIVINE AND HUMAN: WOMEN IN ANCIENT MEXICO AND PERU
  National Museum of Women in the Arts Hosts Only U.S. Showing of Major International Loan Exhibition
February 13, 2006 NMWA CELEBRATES AFRICAN AMERICAN WOMEN FILMMAKERS
WITH YEAR-LONG FILM SERIES: SISTERS IN CINEMA
  WASHINGTON, D.C.—The year 1896 marked the birth of the film industry. Yet, it was not until 93 years later that a major Hollywood film company produced a feature-length film by an African American woman. It took another two years for a film by an African American woman to be nationally distributed. To honor these often overlooked filmmakers, the National Museum of Women in the Arts (NMWA) presents Sisters in Cinema— a yearlong film series, celebrating the work of African American women.
February 9, 2006 VIOLINIST RACHEL BARTON PINE TO PERFORM AT NMWA
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 22 AT 7:30 p.m.
  WASHINGTON, D.C.—The National Museum of Women in the Arts’ (NMWA) Shenson Chamber Music Concert Series presents violinist Rachel Barton Pine in concert on Wednesday, February 22, 2006, at 7:30 p.m. This free recital will be held in the museum’s performance hall, at 1250 New York Avenue, N.W., Washington, D.C.
January 17, 2006 MEDIA ADVISORY
  24th Annual Spring Gala
DIVINA LATINA: A CELEBRATION
January 12, 2006 NMWA TO HONOR WASHINGTON TRADE ASSOCIATION CEO WITH ENTERPRISING WOMAN OF WASHINGTON AWARD
  Diane Casey-Landry, President and CEO of America’s Community Bankers, a Washington D.C.- based trade association, has been chosen to receive the 2006 Enterprising Woman of Washington Award by the Business and Professional Women’s Council of the National Museum of Women in the Arts.
January 3, 2006 NOVELIST JOYCE CAROL OATES READS FROM HER NEW BOOK
THE FEMALE OF THE SPECIES
  Washington, D.C.—Celebrating the tenth year of its Literary Series, NMWA proudly presents a reading, reception, and book signing with novelist Joyce Carol Oates, Friday, January 27, at 7 p.m., in the museum’s performance hall, 1250 New York Avenue, NW, Washington D.C.
October 18, 2005 WATER AND WORDS FLOW THROUGH
THE WATER REMEMBERS: PAINTINGS AND WORKS ON PAPER BY MAY STEVENS 1990-2005
OCTOBER 28, 2005 – JANUARY 15, 2006
  Washington, DC—Refresh the spirit with The Water Remembers: Paintings and Works on Paper by May Stevens 1990-2005, on display at the National Museum of Women in the Arts, October 28, 2005-January 15, 2006.
August 9, 2005 NMWA KICKS OFF ITS NEW ARTS INITIATIVE
WOMEN ARTISTS WORLDWIDE
  MÓNICA CASTILLO: THE PAINTER AND THE BODY
ON VIEW OCTOBER 5, 2005 - JANUARY 22, 2006
IN CONJUNCTION WITH THE CULTURAL INSTITUTE OF MEXICO
August 5, 2005 BOLD, CANDID PORTRAITS ON VIEW IN ALICE NEEL’S WOMEN
AT NMWA OCTOBER 28, 2005–JANUARY 15, 2006
  Washington, D.C. – Alice Neel’s Women, a collection of approximately 80 paintings and drawings by Alice Neel (1900–84), one of 20th-century America’s greatest portrait painters, depicts honest and bold views of the real woman. 1930s intellectuals and leftists, her art world contemporaries, neighbors, strangers, and family are the subjects of this compelling and candid exhibition on view at the National Museum of Women in the Arts from October 28, 2005 through January 15, 2006. A press preview for Alice Neel’s Women is scheduled for Wednesday, October 26, 2005 from 10 a.m. to noon.
August 4, 2005 VISIONARY WOMAN AWARD
  Artist, Children’s Book Author Faith Ringgold, National Women’s Museum Founder Wilhelmina Holladay Receive Moore Visionary Woman Award
June 21, 2005 NATIONAL MUSEUM OF WOMEN IN THE ARTS PURCHASES
CHAKAIA BOOKER’S ACID RAIN
  Work to go on permanent view after its current tour
June 10, 2005 MEDIA ADVISORY
  Steven Scott Collects:
Donations and Promised Gifts to the Permanent Collection
May 12, 2005 DIVE INTO SUMMER WITH
NATALYA NESTEROVA: SUMMER REFLECTIONS
MAY 13 – AUGUST 7, 2005
  Dive into the summer season with Natalya Nesterova:
Summer Reflections
, an exhibition of eleven large-scale shore paintings by Russian-born artist Natalya Nesterova. Chronicling the situations of daily life and ordinary people, these summer seascape paintings depict the characters, costumes, and activities that were traditional at Russia’s southern resorts. Nostalgic of times past and evoking memories of a simpler life, Nesterova’s paintings of people on the street, in parks, on boat trips, at restaurants, or at the beach seem to stop time in its tracks.
Natalya Nesterova: Summer Reflections is on view at the National Museum of Women in the Arts from May 13 – August 7, 2005.
April 13, 2005 SUMMER SIZZLES WITH WOMEN & BLUES
A COMBINATION OF TWO EXHIBITIONS
  AMALIA AMAKI: BOXES, BUTTONS AND THE BLUES
&
WOMEN IN BLUES AND JAZZ
AT NMWA JUNE 10–SEPTEMBER 25, 2005

March 17, 2005 A WHIMSICAL, IMAGINARY LIBRARY FILLED WITH HANDMADE ARTIST’S BOOKS FEATURED IN M.L. VAN NICE: THE LIBRARY AT WADI BEN DAGH
 

Washington, D.C. – Imagine coming upon a library where you could actually peer into your favorite books; where a copy of Lewis Caroll’s Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland had its own rabbit hole for you to gaze into with openings in the shape of hearts, spades, clubs and diamonds. Would it be a real library or a library without structure and logic?

February 16, 2005 SHEILA ISHAM’S THE VICTORIA SERIES
ON VIEW FOR THE FIRST TIME IN ITS ENTIRETY
 

Washington, D.C. – Sheila Isham’s The Victoria Series, featuring five canvases ranging in size from roughly four by seven feet to five by eight feet, will be on view in its entirety at the National Museum of Women in the Arts (NMWA) from February 25 – April 24, 2005. These powerful paintings reflect the artist’s victory over personal hardships and are a tribute to her daughter Sandra who died of HIV/AIDS in 1996.

December 2, 2004 BERTHE MORISOT: AN IMPRESSIONIST AND HER CIRCLE,
JAN. 14 - MAY 8, 2005
 

Washington, D.C. – Over 75 luminous paintings and drawings by celebrated French Impressionist Berthe Morisot (1841-1895) and her colleagues will be on view at the National Museum of Women in the Arts (NMWA) from Jan. 14 through May 8, 2005. Morisot’s brilliant technique, recognized by her peers as the embodiment of that avant-garde movement, will be showcased alongside works by her contemporaries, including Edgar Degas, Claude Monet, Edouard Manet, and Pierre-Auguste Renoir.

December 2, 2004 NMWA AWARDED PRESTIGIOUS FEDERAL GRANT TO CREATE DATABASE OF WOMEN ARTISTS
  Washington, D.C. - The National Museum of Women in the Arts (NMWA) has received a prestigious grant from the 2004 Museums for America program of the Institute of Museum and Library Services (IMLS). The $138,751 grant will allow NMWA to build web-based access to its extensive database of more than 16,500 historic and contemporary women artists. Out of 829 applications, NMWA is one of 190 museums to be awarded the grant in 2004.
October 13, 2004 TRANSITORY PATTERNS: FLORIDA WOMEN ARTISTS
REVEALS STATE’S RANGE OF CONTEMPORARY ART, AT NMWA,
OCT. 15 – DEC. 19, 2004
  Washington, D.C. – Approximately 60 inventive and compelling works in Transitory Patterns: Florida Women Artists at the National Museum of Women in the Arts (NMWA) reflect exciting new artistic techniques and media while highlighting the distinctive artistry and landscape of Florida. The works, on view Oct. 15 through Dec. 19, 2004, were chosen by a jury of leading Florida curators and museum directors, in collaboration with guest curator Joyce Pomeroy Schwartz, from over 700 submissions to the Florida State Committee of NMWA.
October 7, 2004 TROMPE L’OEIL REDEFINED IN CLAUDE RAGUET HIRST:
TRANSFORMING THE AMERICAN STILL LIFE
AT NMWA,
OCT. 15 – DEC. 19, 2004
  Washington, D.C. – Thirty-five innovative trompe l’oeil paintings and watercolors by Claude Raguet Hirst (1855-1942), featuring literary texts on women’s concerns, will be on view at the National Museum of Women in the Arts (NMWA) Oct. 15 through Dec.19, 2004. Hirst was the only American woman artist accomplished in this hyper-realistic style of still-life painting.
May 25, 2004 PENETRATING PHOTOGRAPHS COVER 60 YEARS
OF MODERN CULTURAL HISTORY IN FOCUS ON THE SOUL:
THE PHOTOGRAPHS OF LOTTE JACOBI
AT NMWA
JUNE 18 – SEPT. 5, 2004
 

Washington, D.C. – Over 80 vintage photographic prints that span the six decades of Lotte Jacobi’s distinguished career will be on view in Focus on the Soul: The Photographs of Lotte Jacobi at the National Museum of Women in the Arts (NMWA) June 18 through Sept. 5, 2004. This major retrospective is the first in the U.S. to feature Jacobi’s famous portrait photographs as well as her under-examined stage photographs from pre-World War II Berlin and New York, her abstract Photogenics series, and documentary images taken during her travels through Germany, the Soviet Union, and the Americas.

March 22, 2004 WOMEN’S CONTRIBUTIONS TO THE UNPARALLELED STYLE AND INNOVATION THAT DEFINE DESIGN FROM THE FIVE NORDIC COUNTRIES IN NORDIC COOL: HOT WOMEN DESIGNERS, APRIL 23 - SEPT. 12, 2004
  From celebrated furniture and textiles to the latest in architecture and web designs, the more than 200 objects in the exhibition Nordic Cool: Hot Women Designers are among the best examples of beautiful and functional designs created in Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway, and Sweden. The exhibition is organized by the National Museum of Women in the Arts (NMWA) and will be on view from April 23 to Sept. 12, 2004. It will include both designers who have changed the course of decorative arts and those who are currently making contributions to contemporary design.
March 19, 2004 POWERFUL COMBINATIONS OF IMAGES AND WORDS
ON VIEW IN BOOK AS ART XV, AT NMWA MARCH 29 -
NOV. 28, 2004
  New works by 27 women from around the world, inspired by their responses to contemporary events and women’s experiences, evoke memories and provoke contemplation in Book As Art XV, on view March 29 through November 28, 2004, at the National Museum of Women in the Arts (NMWA).
February 19, 2004 TIME AND THE FOUR ELEMENTS ARE UNCOVERED IN
EDDA RENOUF'S REVEALED STRUCTURES AT NMWA
FEB. 20-MAY 16, 2004
  Washington, D.C. - Thirty-five of Edda Renouf’s highly meditative abstract paintings and oil-pastels will be on view from Feb. 20 through May 16, 2004, in Edda Renouf: Revealed Structures, at the National Museum of Women in the Arts (NMWA).
January 21, 2004 NMWA HONORS CATHERINE HUGHES, FOUNDER OF RADIO ONE, INC., AS ENTERPRISING WOMAN OF WASHINGTON 2004
  Washington, D.C. – Catherine Hughes, founder and chairperson of Radio One, Inc., will receive the Enterprising Washington Woman of the Year 2004 Award from the National Museum of Women in the Arts (NMWA) and its Business and Professional Women’s Council on Feb. 4, 2004. For 30 years, Hughes has pioneered an African American radio market built on principles of community and family empowerment.
September 29, 2003 ENTERPRISING WOMEN: 250 YEARS OF AMERICAN BUSINESS AT NMWA OCTOBER 24, 2003 - FEBRUARY 24, 2004 HIGHLIGHTS CAREERS OF 40 GROUNDBREAKING ENTREPRENEURS
 

Washington, D.C. – From media moguls Katharine Graham and
Oprah Winfrey to eBay President Meg Whitman and salon founder Elizabeth Arden, 40 of America’s most successful businesswomen will be featured in Enterprising Women: 250 Years of American Business, at the National Museum of Women in the Arts from Oct. 24, 2003 to Feb. 29, 2004. Women from the Colonial era to the end of the 20th century, including cosmetics pioneer Madam C.J. Walker, movie producer Mary Pickford, and aircraft manufacturer Olive Ann Beech, will be represented by over 350 documents, photographs, artifacts, and video portraits.

September 22, 2003 EUDORA WELTY'S STRIKING PHOTOGRAPHS, ON VIEW AT NMWA OCT. 27 - FEB. 29, 2004, ARE INTRICATELY LINKED TO HER WRITING
 

Washington, D.C. – NMWA will present Passionate Observer: Photographs by Eudora Welty, highlighting over 50 of Welty’s black-and-white photographs from the 1930s. The photographs will be on view from Oct. 27, 2003, through Feb. 29, 2004. Pulitzer Prize-winning author Welty (1909-2001), a native of Mississippi best known for her novels and short stories of life in the South, was also an accomplished photographer.

June 13, 2003 CAROL KREEGER DAVIDSON'S POWERFUL AND ENIGMATIC FIGURES, DAYS OF DANGER, ON VIEW AT NMWA, JULY 25 - SEPTEMBER 14, 2003
  Washington, D.C. – Sculptor Carol Kreeger Davidson’s series Days of Danger (1995) features seven large, smooth metal figures that represent archetypal warrior-goddesses. On view at the National Museum of Women in the Arts (NMWA) July 25 – September 14, 2003, these works are thought-provoking expressions of power and aggression.
May 2, 2003 LESLEY DILL: A TEN YEAR SURVEY INVESTIGATES THE
POWERFUL INTERSECTION OF LANGUAGE AND IMAGE
IN WORKS AT NMWA JULY 11 - SEPTEMBER 14, 2003
  Washington, D.C. – Lesley Dill: A Ten Year Survey, on view at the National Museum of Women in the Arts (NMWA) from July 11 through September 14, 2003, will feature 35 visually compelling and thought-provoking mixed-media works, all created since 1993. They are the result of the artist’s encounter with Emily Dickinson’s poetry, which transformed Dill’s work.
February 10, 2003 INSOMNIA: LANDSCAPES OF THE NIGHT REVEALS THE EFFECTS OF NIGHTFALL ON ARTISTS' PERCEPTIONS AND IMAGINATION, AT THE NATIONAL MUSEUM OF WOMEN IN THE ARTS, MARCH 10 - NOVEMBER 30, 2003
  Washington, D.C. - Louise Bourgeois, M. Jordan Tierney, and Kate Kern are among the 30 artists who interpret the many sources of sleeplessness in Insomnia: Landscapes of the Night, at the National Museum of Women in the Arts (NMWA), March 10 through November 30, 2003. The 51 distinctive paintings, drawings, assemblages, and artists' books in the exhibition detail the artists' heart-pounding realms of nightmare, their yearning for the bliss of peaceful dreams, and other nocturnal meditations.
February 10, 2003 RUSSIAN NOBILITY’S PATRONAGE OF WOMEN ARTISTS SHOWCASED IN AN IMPERIAL COLLECTION: WOMEN ARTISTS FROM THE STATE HERMITAGE MUSEUM AT THE NATIONAL MUSEUM OF WOMEN IN THE ARTS, OPENING FEBRUARY 2003
  Washington, D.C. – The National Museum of Women in the Arts (NMWA) will present An Imperial Collection: Women Artists from the State Hermitage Museum, from February 14 through June 18, 2003, that features 15 European women artists whose works adorned the palaces of Russian royalty and nobility. This remarkable exhibition is one of a select group of international projects commemorating the 300th anniversary of the founding of St. Petersburg, and will tour the U. S. for one year only. On view will be 49 oil paintings, watercolors, and sculptures, most of which have never been viewed outside of Russia.
January 8, 2003 NATIONAL MUSEUM OF WOMEN IN THE ARTS ANNOUNCES MAJOR ACQUISITION OF SCULPTURE BY MAGDALENA ABAKANOWICZ
  Washington, D.C. -- The National Museum of Women in the Arts (NMWA) has acquired Four Seated Figures (2002) by internationally renowned Polish sculptor Magdalena Abakanowicz. It is on view in the museum's third-floor sculpture gallery. Four Seated Figures was acquired by the museum through a contribution by Patti Cadby Birch, a member of the museum's National Advisory Board, and the Members' Art Acquisition Fund
September 3, 2002 JUDY CHICAGO, AT THE NATIONAL MUSEUM OF WOMEN IN THE ARTS OCTOBER 11, 2002 - JANUARY 5, 2003, WILL EXPLORE THE FEMINIST PIONEER’S ARTISTIC PROCESS
  Washington, D.C. - Judy Chicago, one of America’s artistic trailblazers and a pioneer of the feminist art movement, will be the subject of an exhibition at the National Museum of Women in the Arts (NMWA) from October 11, 2002 to January 5, 2003. The exhibition will feature over 90 works from the 1960s to the present, and will include selections from Chicago’s best-known work as well as rarely seen early and recent autobiographical pieces.

*This exhibition is presented at NMWA through the generous sponsorship of The Elizabeth A. Sackler Foundation.
July 24, 2002 NATIONAL MUSEUM OF WOMEN IN THE ARTS BOARD OF TRUSTEES SELECTS JUDY L. LARSON AS NEW DIRECTOR
  Washington, D.C. – Following a national search, the Board of Trustees of the National Museum of Women in the Arts (NMWA) announces the appointment of Judy L. Larson as director of the museum. She will begin work at the museum in early September.
May 24, 2002 FEMINISM AND ART: SELECTIONS FROM THE PERMANENT COLLECTION, AT THE NATIONAL MUSEUM OF WOMEN IN THE ARTS JUNE 14 - AUG. 11, 2002, EXPLORES HOW THE WOMEN’S MOVEMENT INFLUENCED CONTEMPORARY ART
  Washington, D.C. – This summer the National Museum of Women in the Arts (NWMA) will present an exhibition that chronicles how women artists have explored gender issues since the 1960s. On view from June 14 to August 11, 2002, the exhibition will include groundbreaking artists such as Judy Chicago, May Stevens, Ana Mendieta, and the Guerrilla Girls, as well as Laura Cottingham’s documentary NOT FOR SALE: Feminism and Art in the U.S.A. in the 1970s.
May 24, 2002 CAROL SCHWARTZOTT CREATES KIMONO/KOSODE, A LIMITED EDITION ARTIST’S BOOK PUBLISHED WITH AN AWARD FROM THE NATIONAL MUSEUM OF WOMEN IN THE ARTS LIBRARY FELLOWS
  Washington, D.C. -- Artist Carol Schwartzott, winner of the 2002 Library Fellows Award from the National Museum of Women in the Arts (NMWA), has produced a limited-edition artist’s book that evokes the many graceful layers of traditional Japanese dress. Kimono/Kosode employs a repeated design of a cutout kimono shape and tri-fold panels covered with Japanese Chiyogami papers of varied patterns and related colors.
February 22, 2002 BOOK AS ART XIV: TEMPTATIONS OFFERS SUMPTUOUS INTERPRETATIONS OF HUMAN DESIRES AT THE NATIONAL MUSEUM OF WOMEN IN THE ARTS MARCH 4, 2002 – JANUARY 5, 2003
  Washington, D.C. – The allure of food, love, money, and other permitted and forbidden pleasures are explored in the exhibition Book as Art XIV: Temptations, on view March 4, 2002 – January 5, 2003 at the National Museum of Women in the Arts’ Library and Research Center. The 73 paintings, drawings, and distinctive books by 37 artists will focus on temptations that are ever enticing to humans.
January 18, 2002 AFRICAN CULTURE INSPIRES AMERICAN ARTIST AND TEACHER IN LOIS MAILOU JONES: IMAGINING AFRICA, AT THE NATIONAL MUSEUM OF WOMEN IN THE ARTS FEB. 15 – MAY 12, 2002
  Washington, D.C. – Lois Mailou Jones embraced her African heritage during her career as an internationally recognized painter and teacher at Howard University in Washington, D.C. A selection of works from both early and late stages of her career, along with text and a film highlighting her journey as an artist, will be on view at the National Museum of Women in the Arts (NMWA) February 15 – May 12, 2002.
January 3, 2002 PLACES OF THEIR OWN: EMILY CARR, GEORGIA O’KEEFFE, AND FRIDA KAHLO EXAMINES ARTISTIC AND BIOGRAPHICAL LINKS BETWEEN THREE ICONIC ARTISTS OF THE AMERICAS, AT THE NATIONAL MUSEUM OF WOMEN IN THE ARTS FEB. 8 – MAY 12, 2002
  Washington, D.C. – Three great 20th-century artists of North America – Emily Carr of Canada, Georgia O’Keeffe of the United States, and Frida Kahlo of Mexico – searched for meaning in the landscape and in the cultures surrounding them. In doing so, they helped create a new identity for North American art. The National Museum of Women in the Arts (NMWA) will present the exhibition Places of Their Own: Emily Carr, Georgia O’Keeffe, and Frida Kahlo from February 8 to May 12, 2002, to explore the fascinating intersections of these legendary artists.
October 30, 2001 VIRGIN TERRITORY: WOMEN, GENDER, AND HISTORY IN CONTEMPORARY BRAZILIAN ART EXAMINES IMPACT OF DISCOVERY BY PORTUGUESE, AT THE NATIONAL MUSEUM OF WOMEN IN THE ARTS OCT. 18, 2001 – JAN. 6, 2002
  Washington, D.C. – Five hundred years ago the region that is now Brazil was discovered, explored, and colonized by the Portuguese, an encounter that has shaped almost every facet of Brazilian society. The National Museum of Women in the Arts (NMWA) has organized the exhibition Virgin Territory: Women, Gender, and History in Contemporary Brazilian Art, on view from October 18, 2001 to January 6, 2002, to offer a range of current artistic perspectives on the link between identity and colonialism in Brazil today.
October 1, 2001 SUSANNA AND THE ELDERS, RESTORED REINTERPRETS INSPIRATION FOR ARTEMISIA GENTILESCHI PAINTING; ON VIEW AT THE NATIONAL MUSEUM OF WOMEN IN THE ARTS OCTOBER 18, 2001 – JANUARY 21, 2002
  Washington, D.C. – New York artist Kathleen Gilje has created a two-part installation entitled Susanna and The Elders, Restored, based on the life and work of 17th-century Italian artist Artemisia Gentileschi. It will be on view at the National Museum of Women in the Arts (NWMA) from October 18, 2001 to January 21, 2002.
June 8, 2001 FAVORITE FAIRY TALE INSPIRES DIVERSE ARTISTIC INTERPRETATIONS AS RAPUNZEL COMES TO THE NATIONAL MUSEUM OF WOMEN IN THE ARTS FROM JULY 2, 2001, TO JANUARY 27, 2002
  Washington, D.C. – Rapunzel, Rapunzel! Let Down Your Hair!, an exhibition that offers varied artistic treatments of the well-loved fairy tale, will be on view at the National Museum of Women in the Arts (NMWA) from July 2, 2001, to January 27, 2002. The exhibition, for young people and adults alike, features 54 illustrations and 41 books published in the last 150 years in English, French, German, and Dutch.
April 20, 2001 BOTANICAL ILLUSTRATORS WHO MADE THEIR MARK ON SCIENCE HIGHLIGHTED IN EXHIBITION AT THE NATIONAL MUSEUM OF WOMEN IN THE ARTS APRIL 5 – AUGUST 26, 2001
  Washington, D.C. – Illustrating Nature: Three Centuries of Botanical Prints will showcase the tremendous contributions women artists made to the development of botanical art in the 17th through the 19th centuries. The exhibition, organized by the National Museum of Women in the Arts (NMWA), features 50 prints and four books by British, French, and Italian artists.
March 23, 2001 NATIONAL MUSEUM OF WOMEN IN THE ARTS UPDATES AND EXPANDS ITS PERMANENT COLLECTION GALLERIES; NEW INSTALLATION OPENS MAY 1, 2001
  Washington, D.C. -- The National Museum of Women in the Arts (NMWA) has undertaken a major project to update and expand its galleries devoted to the permanent collection. Beginning May 1, more square feet of the museum will be devoted to the collection than ever before.
January 30, 2001 MAJOR EXHIBITION ASSESSES ART OF ANNA MARY ROBERTSON "GRANDMA" MOSES AND HER PLACE IN HISTORY; PREMIERES AT THE NATIONAL MUSEUM OF WOMEN IN THE ARTS MARCH 15 - JUNE 10, 2001
  Washington, D.C. – Grandma Moses in the 21st Century, an exhibition of 87 of the most important works by Anna Mary Robertson "Grandma" Moses from public and private collections in the U.S. and Japan, will begin a national tour at the National Museum of Women in the Arts (NMWA) from March 15 to June 10, 2001. It will examine Moses’ artistic development; her place in the art world at the nexus of folk art, fine art, and popular culture; and the phenomenon of her success.
December 8, 2000 NATIONAL MUSEUM OF WOMEN IN THE ARTS CREATES ART APPRECIATION PROGRAM FOR USE IN SCHOOLS NATIONWIDE
  Washington, D.C. – Exploring Art, a visual art education program highlighting the contributions of women artists, provides students nationwide an opportunity to understand and appreciate art. The program, devised by the National Museum of Women in the Arts (NMWA), is being implemented in association with the museum’s state committees.
November 6, 2000 FIVE CENTURIES OF ART BY WOMEN HIGHLIGHTED IN NEW PERMANENT COLLECTION CATALOGUE FROM THE NATIONAL MUSEUM OF WOMEN IN THE ARTS
  Washington, D.C. — Women Artists: Works from the National Museum of Women in the Arts, a new catalogue published in October 2000, features 90 works by 86 artists who have helped shape the Western art world from the Renaissance to the present. Introductory chapter essays and individual entries explore the eras in which these artists worked, their training, professional careers, and the works they produced. This beautifully designed volume also provides full-page reproductions of the artworks, accompanied by portraits and concise biographies of the artists.
November 6, 2000 ARTISTS ARE CELEBRATED IN ARTISTS’ BOOKS AT THE NATIONAL MUSEUM OF WOMEN IN THE ARTS JANUARY 22-MAY 13, 2001
  Washington, D.C. — The National Museum of Women in the Arts’ Library and Research Center showcases works paying tribute to artists in Book as Art XIII: Artists’ Books about Artists. Saluting both famous and anonymous artists from painters, sculptors, and architects to musicians, poets, and quilt makers, the authors demonstrate how these artists influence and inspire them in over 40 unique and limited edition artists’ books.
October 24, 2000 VISIONARY DESIGNER AND DIRECTOR JULIE TAYMOR'S LARGE-SCALE INSTALLATIONS FROM KEY PRODUCTIONS AT NATIONAL MUSEUM OF WOMEN IN THE ARTS, NOV. 16, 2000 - FEB. 4, 2001
  Washington, D.C. -- Julie Taymor: Playing with Fire will showcase the career of the extraordinary multidisciplinary artist whose fertile imagination and genius for storytelling in theater and opera productions and on film have drawn acclaim from audiences and critics worldwide. Taymor's first major retrospective will have its only East Coast venue at the National Museum of Women in the Arts from November 16, 2000, to February 4, 2001.
July 6, 2000 GENDER AND IDENTITY ISSUES EXPLORED IN THE WORKS OF ROMAINE BROOKS, AT THE NATIONAL MUSEUM OF WOMEN IN THE ARTS JUNE 29 -SEPTEMBER 24, 2000
  Washington, D.C. -- Amazons in the Drawing Room: The Art of Romaine Brooks, the first major retrospective in over 30 years to showcase the work of this American expatriate artist, will be presented by the National Museum of Women in the Arts (NMWA) from June 29 to September 24, 2000. In this comprehensive study, Brooks' art will be seen in the context of her sexuality and identity. Thirty-two works from the Smithsonian American Art Museum will be combined with 37 paintings, drawings, photographs, and sketch books, many previously unavailable for viewing, from public and private collections in France.
June 15, 2000 HIGHLIGHTS OF ARTIST'S BOOK PERMANENT COLLECTION ON DISPLAY AT THE NATIONAL MUSEUM OF WOMEN IN THE ARTS JANUARY 24 - DECEMBER 31, 2000
  Washington, D.C. -- The National Museum of Women in the Arts Library and Research Center (LRC) showcases examples from its collection of more than 500 unique and limited edition artists' books to mark the 12th annual exhibition in the Book as Art series. On view January 24 - December 31, 2000, Book as Art XII includes 50 works in various media that unite the talents of American and international visual and literary artists.
April 21, 2000 NELLEKE NIX'S ODE TO NATURE RECEIVES THE 2000 NATIONAL MUSEUM OF WOMEN IN THE ARTS LIBRARY FELLOWS ARTIST'S BOOK AWARD
  Washington, D.C. -- Zones of Time, Sand and Rain by Nelleke Nix, an artist's book that portrays the flora and fauna of Costa Rica in a colorful compilation, is the winner of this year's Library Fellows Award from the National Museum of Women in the Arts (NMWA). The rich tropical plants and wild animals of this country adorn the pages of the book, produced in a limited edition of 125. Numbered and signed copies are available for $300 from the NMWA museum shop, or by mail by calling 1-800-222-7270.
April 20, 2000 PHOTOGRAPHS BY GRACIELA ITURBIDE, A DRAMATIC VISUAL RECORD OF MEXICO'S DIVERSITY AND CULTURAL TRANSITION, AT THE NATIONAL MUSEUM OF WOMEN IN THE ARTS JUNE 1 - SEPTEMBER 24, 2000
  Washington, D.C. - Images of the Spirit: Photographs by Graciela Iturbide, at the National Museum of Women in the Arts (NMWA) from June 1 to September 24, 2000, features more than 80 gelatin silver prints of Iturbide's ethnographic photography. Reflecting the diversity of Mexican and other Latin American cultures, Iturbide's evocative images portray the surreal and spiritual aspects of daily life. Iturbide's works reveal her compassion for and dedication to her country and its people.
January 12, 2000 FIRST U.S. RETROSPECTIVE OF THE WORK OF REMEDIOS VARO, CELEBRATED SURREALIST ARTIST FROM MEXICO, AT THE NATIONAL MUSEUM OF WOMEN IN THE ARTS FEBRUARY 10 - MAY 29, 2000
  Washington, D.C. -- The Magic of Remedios Varo, the first retrospective in the U.S. to showcase the powerful imagination and intellectual curiosity of one of Mexico’s greatest women artists, will be presented by the National Museum of Women in the Arts from February 10 to May 29, 2000. The exhibition includes 77 of Varo’s finest paintings and drawings from collections in Mexico and the U.S. Varo (1908-1963) used her superior technical skill to create richly detailed surrealist works filled with science, magic, and women’s experience. She explored the world through her work while also inventing alternatives to it.
November 8, 1999 CAUTIONARY TALES OF CONSERVATION VS. DEVELOPMENT IN ELLEN LANYON: TRANSFORMATIONS, SELECTED WORKS FROM 1971–1999; AT THE NATIONAL MUSEUM OF WOMEN IN THE ARTS DECEMBER 23, 1999 – MAY 7, 2000
  Washington, D.C. – For nearly three decades, Ellen Lanyon has created fantastical and realistic images that raise intriguing questions about the mysteries of nature and the effects of humankind on our habitat. Fifty paintings, drawings, and prints will be included in Ellen Lanyon: Transformations, Selected Works from 1971–1999, on view at the National Museum of Women in the Arts from December 23, 1999 to May 7, 2000.
September 7, 1999 ILLINOIS WOMEN ARTISTS: THE NEW MILLENNIUM OPENS AT THE NATIONAL MUSEUM OF WOMEN IN THE ARTS
  Washington, D.C. B An exhibition of contemporary artwork by women from Illinois debuts this week at its national venue, the National Museum of Women in the Arts (NMWA). Illinois Women Artists: The New Millennium showcases the breadth of current artistic activity around the state and will be on view at NMWA September 9 - December 12, 1999, before returning to Illinois to complete an extensive tour of state venues.
August 18, 1999 DEFINING EYE: WOMEN PHOTOGRAPHERS OF THE 20th CENTURY EXPLORES HOW WOMEN PERCEIVE THEMSELVES AND THE WORLD; AT THE NATIONAL MUSEUM OF WOMEN IN THE ARTS OCTOBER 7, 1999–JANUARY 9, 2000
  Washington, D.C. -- In the exhibition Defining Eye: Women Photographers of the 20th Century, 80 of this century’s most accomplished photographers depict the multifaceted roles and aspirations of women in contemporary society. Eighty-one photographs, most of which are vintage prints and include many that have never been published, will be on view at the National Museum of Women in the Arts (NMWA) from October 7, 1999 to January 9, 2000.
June 28, 1999 CONCEPTUAL ART AND TRAVELERS’ TALES IN BOOK AS ART XI, ON VIEW AT THE NATIONAL MUSEUM OF WOMEN IN THE ARTS JULY 19–DECEMBER 31, 1999
  Washington, D.C. -- Book as Art XI, the latest exhibition in the annual series showcasing artists’ books at the National Museum of Women in the Arts, includes a strong representation of works by internationally recognized conceptual artists and by artists taking both real and imaginary journeys. Book as Art XI will be on view in the museum’s Library and Research Center from July 19 through December 31, 1999.
June 28, 1999 METICULOUS, POETIC WOOD ENGRAVINGS BY AMERICAN PRINTMAKER GRACE ALBEE ON VIEW AT THE NATIONAL MUSEUM OF WOMEN IN THE ARTS JULY 26 THROUGH NOVEMBER 21, 1999
  Washington, D.C. – In detailed representations of both great urban centers and rustic scenes of rural life, Grace Albee faithfully recorded the places she knew and loved during a career that spanned more than half of this century. The National Museum of Women in the Arts will present a retrospective exhibition of her wood engravings, Grace Albee: An American Printmaker, 1890–1985, on view from July 26 through November 21, 1999.
May 26, 1999 STUNNING CHRONICLE OF SUFFERING AND RENEWAL BY RUSSIAN ARTIST EVA LEVINA-ROZENGOLTS ON VIEW AT THE NATIONAL MUSEUM OF WOMEN IN THE ARTS JUNE 17 THROUGH SEPTEMBER 26, 1999
  Washington, D.C. – When Eva Levina-Rozengolts returned to Moscow from exile in Siberia at age 58, she began her most significant body of work: ten series of drawings of landscapes and figures that reflect and transcend the anguish of exile. The National Museum of Women in the Arts will present 56 of these works, never seen outside of Russia, from the collection of the artist’s daughter and the State Pushkin Museum of Fine Arts in Moscow. Eva Levina-Rozengolts: Her Life and Work will be on view from June 17 through September 26, 1999.
May 6, 1999 KAZUKO WATANABE’S POIGNANT TRIBUTE TO HER GRANDFATHER RECEIVES 1999 NATIONAL MUSEUM OF WOMEN IN THE ARTS LIBRARY FELLOWS ARTIST’S BOOK AWARD
  Washington, D.C. -- The Diary of a Sparrow, California artist Kazuko Watanabe’s moving interpretation of her grandfather’s diary, is the winner of this year’s Library Fellows Award from the National Museum of Women in the Arts (NMWA). The limited edition artist’s book, alternating image and word in layered and variable ways, exquisitely chronicles history as seen through one family’s experiences and celebrates the power of memory. Numbered and signed copies are available from the NMWA Museum Shop for $300, or by mail by calling 800.222.7270.
April 19, 1999 THE INTENSELY COLORED, SYMBOLICALLY IMAGINATIVE WORK OF SELF-TAUGHT ARTIST NELLIE MAE ROWE ON VIEW AT THE NATIONAL MUSEUM OF WOMEN IN THE ARTS JUNE 3 THROUGH SEPTEMBER 12, 1999
  Washington, D.C. – Approximately 95 drawings, collages, and sculptures by Nellie Mae Rowe, termed "stunning" by The New York Times and exhibiting "a celebratory energy that is close to irresistible," will be on display at the National Museum of Women in the Arts (NMWA) from June 3 through September 12, 1999. The Art of Nellie Mae Rowe: "Ninety-Nine and a Half Won’t Do," a line from one of Rowe’s favorite gospel songs) is the first major touring exhibition of the work of this self-taught artist.
January 20, 1999 THE INTERPLAY BETWEEN LANGUAGE AND IMAGE EXPLORED IN THE VISUAL POETRY OF MIRELLA BENTIVOGLIO ON DISPLAY AT THE NATIONAL MUSEUM OF WOMEN IN THE ARTS MARCH 1 - JUNE 12, 1999
  Washington, D.C. -- The National Museum of Women in the Arts (NMWA) will present, for the first time in Washington, D.C., an exhibition of visual and concrete poetry by Mirella Bentivoglio, one of the most important contemporary artists in Italy to explore the relationship between language and image. Among the 50 pieces on display in the museum's Library and Research Center are works of visual and concrete poetry, photomontages, collages, and unique artist's books.
January 11, 1999 THE NARRATIVE THREAD: WOMEN’S EMBROIDERY FROM RURAL INDIA SHOWCASES REVIVED ART FORM THAT ENHANCES WOMEN’S LIVES; ON VIEW AT THE NATIONAL MUSEUM OF WOMEN IN THE ARTS FEBRUARY 4 - MAY 9, 1999
  Washington, D.C. -- The Narrative Thread: Women’s Embroidery from Rural India, at the National Museum of Women in the Arts from February 4 through May 9, 1999, will examine the revival and reinvention of a quilting tradition. The 30 communally created quilts depict stories on topics ranging from village life and Hindu epics to health care and women’s rights.
December 3, 1998 A 20TH-CENTURY ARTIST’S TRIBUTE TO HER PREDECESSORS AT THE NATIONAL MUSEUM OF WOMEN IN THE ARTS DECEMBER 14, 1998–JULY 5, 1999
  Washington, D.C. -- A technical virtuoso and stylistic independent, 20th-century artist Joyce Treiman firmly adhered to the figurative tradition of the old masters, despite contemporary artistic movements that surrounded her. The result is an eclectic body of autobiographical work that explores life’s transience, the wry comedy of human existence, the creative process, and her rightful place in an artistic lineage. Painting in a Lonely Arena: Joyce Treiman and the Old Masters, at the National Museum of Women in the Arts (NMWA) Dec. 14, 1998—July 5, 1999, is a rare East Coast museum exhibition of some of this California artist’s most poignant creations.
September 21, 1998 BERENICE ABBOTT’S CHANGING NEW YORK, 1935-1939 CHRONICLES EMERGENCE OF CITY AS MODERN METROPOLIS; ON VIEW AT THE NATIONAL MUSEUM OF WOMEN IN THE ARTS OCTOBER 22, 1998–JANUARY 19, 1999
  Washington, D.C. -- Changing New York is photographer Berenice Abbott’s extraordinary documentation of New York from 1935 to 1939, when the city lost its 19th-century trappings to skyscrapers that would transform the skyline. From Oct. 22, 1998 through Jan. 19, 1999, the National Museum of Women in the Arts (NMWA) will exhibit 126 of the 305 unique vintage prints produced by Abbott for the project, many on display for the first time.
September 21, 1998 MOSCOW ARTIST TATYANA NAZARENKO EXAMINES CONTEMPORARY RUSSIA IN AN EXHIBITION AT THE NATIONAL MUSEUM OF WOMEN IN THE ARTS, OCTOBER 15, 1998–JANUARY 10, 1999
  Washington, D.C. -- Tatyana Nazarenko: Transition portrays the passage of the Russian people from communism to capitalism and their struggle to adapt to the changing political environment. In her first significant U.S. exhibition, Nazarenko recreates scenes from the streets and subway passages of present-day Moscow, showing the disaffection of Russian citizens with their new government. Transition, which includes approximately 27 free-standing cut-out figures and ten paintings, will be on view at the National Museum of Women in the Arts (NMWA) from Oct. 15, 1998 to Jan. 10, 1999.
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